Consider Your Ways: Questions for the New Year
One of the many ways Don Whitney serves the church is by asking really good questions. Here's a list of useful questions that Dr. Whitney wrote that are useful to ask at the beginning of the new year.
Fathers - Consider using these questions around the dinner table this week with your family.
Husbands - Consider using these questions with your wife on your next date night.
Pastors - Consider using these questions in your church, perhaps your newsletter or something similar.
The following questions from Don Whitney are available for free online in PDF and DOC format at http://biblicalspirituality.org/inserts.html
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Once,
when the people of God had become careless in their relationship with Him, the
Lord rebuked them through the prophet Haggai. “Consider your ways!” (Haggai 1:5) he declared, urging them to reflect
on some of the things happening to them, and to evaluate their slipshod
spirituality in light of what God had told them.
Even those most faithful to God
occasionally need to pause and think about the direction of their lives. It’s so easy to bump along from one busy week
to another without ever stopping to ponder where we’re going and where we
should be going.
The beginning of a new year is
an ideal time to stop, look up, and get our bearings. To that end, here are some questions to ask
prayerfully in the presence of God.
- What’s one thing you could do this year to increase your enjoyment of God?
- What’s the most humanly impossible thing you will ask God to do this year?
- What’s the single most important thing you could do to improve the quality of your family life
this year?
- In which spiritual discipline do you most want to make progress this year, and what will you
do about it?
- What is the single biggest time-waster in your life, and what will you do about it this year?
- What is the most helpful new way you could strengthen your church?
- For whose salvation will you pray most fervently this year?
- What’s the most important way you will, by God’s grace, try to make this year different
from last year?
- What one thing could you do to improve your prayer life this year?
- What single thing that you plan to do this year
will matter most in ten years? In
eternity?
In addition to these ten
questions, here are twenty-one more to help you “Consider your ways.” Think on the entire list at one sitting, or
answer one question each day for a month.
- What’s the most important decision you need to make this year?
- What area of your life most needs simplifying, and what’s one way you could simplify in that
area?
- What’s the most important need you feel burdened to meet this year?
- What habit would you most like to establish this year?
- Who do you most want to encourage this year?
- What is your most important financial goal this year, and what is the most important step you can take toward achieving it?
- What’s the single most important thing you could do to improve the quality of your work life this
year?
- What’s one new way you could be a blessing to your pastor (or to another who ministers to you) this year?
- What’s one thing you could do this year to enrich the spiritual legacy you will leave to your children and grandchildren?
- What book, in addition to the Bible, do you most want to read this year?
- What one thing do you most regret about last year, and what will you do about it this year?
- What single blessing from God do you want to seek most earnestly this year?
- In what area of your life do you most need growth, and what will you do about it this year?
- What’s the most important trip you want to take this year?
- What skill do you most want to learn or improve this year?
- To what need or ministry will you try to give an unprecedented amount this year?
- What’s the single most important thing you could do to improve the quality of your commute this
year?
- What one biblical doctrine do you most want to understand better this year, and what will you do about it?
- If those who know you best gave you one piece of advice, what would they say? Would they be right? What will you do about it?
- What’s the most important new item you want to buy this year?
- In what area of your life do you most need change, and what will you do about it this year?
If you’ve found these
questions helpful, you might want to put them someplace—in a day planner, PDA,
calendar, bulletin board, etc.—where you can review them more frequently than
once a year.
So let’s evaluate our
lives, make plans and goals, and live this new year with biblical diligence,
remembering that, “The plans of the diligent lead surely to advantage”
(Proverbs 21:5). But in all things let’s
also remember our dependence on our King who said, “Apart from Me you can do
nothing” (John 15:5).
Copyright
© 2003 Donald S. Whitney. All rights reserved.
For more
short, reproducible pieces like this, see www.BiblicalSpirituality.org



Ryan, thank you for introducing me and others to this site. I look forward to reading through the other bulletin inserts. If, what you posted, is any indication of what the other inserts are like, man, we're in for a whirlwind of seeing how far we fall short of God's glory and how God, through Christ, is so good to us.
Posted by: TW | Jan 4, 2008 11:16:21 AM
I like the list of questions and agree that evaluation and goal setting are invaluable. I'm commenting today because I am struck by the wording of the first question. It seemed to me the paramount question of the list.
It is: "What’s one thing you could do this year to increase your enjoyment of God?" - - which seems a little on the self-centered, self-serving side, doesn't it? One more "it's all about me" kind of thing (which our culture is already so riddled with) rather than it being all about God. Is life about our enjoyment of God (enjoyment of Him being a blessing we all can experience daily) or is it about God, His purposes, and the opportunities He gives us to glorify Him in our obedience?
I'm really not trying to make too much of the question . . . but just wondering the reason for it being worded just that way.
Kerri Hamilton
Posted by: Kerri Hamilton | Jan 10, 2008 9:55:31 PM
Kerri,
There are many Christians who live their lives like the "mud raker" from Pilgrim's Progress. They are so focused in the worries, suffering, and sin around them that they don't even consider the fact that they can and should look up! It has been my experience that when I truly take the time to gaze at the Lord, He reveals His awesome beauty which makes one rejoice in such an awesome God. In this, we are truly worshiping in Spirit and in Truth and enjoying Him. May I add, that we can get so focused on ministry and service that we can also lose sight of the Lord. Martha and Mary are a good illustration of this.
Karen
Posted by: Karen | Jan 11, 2008 8:01:23 AM
Thank you for all these thought provoking questions!
Blessings,
Karen
Posted by: Karen | Jan 11, 2008 8:07:41 AM